materialism is the attempt to explain what is immediately given us by what is given us indirectly. All that is objective, extended, active—that is to say, all that is material—is regarded by materialism as affording so solid a basis for its explanation, that a reduction of everything to this can leave nothing to be desired (especially if in ultimate analysis this reduction should resolve itself into action and reaction). But ...all this is given indirectly and in the highest degree determined, and is therefore merely a relatively present object, for it has passed through the machinery and manufactory of the brain, and has thus come under the forms of space, time and causality, by means of which it is first presented to us as extended in space and active in time. From such an indirectly given object, materialism seeks to explain what is immediately given, the Idea (in which alone the object that materialism starts with exists), and finally even the will from which all those fundamental forces, that manifest themselves, under the guidance of causes, and therefore according to law, are in truth to be explained. — WWI
↪Wayfarer
That by way of agreement? Can we cure Arcane Sandwich of his reductionism? :wink: — Banno
Math has to be absolute, in the formal sense that "it's not up for debate", it's not for the community of mathematicians to decide. — Arcane Sandwich
2/4 = 1/2 — Arcane Sandwich
↪Arcane Sandwich
Fluff. Let me lay it out for you. Bunge et al, the scientific materialists want to bring mind under the ambit of the neurosciences - firm, objective, and measurable. Thoughts are brain patterns - what could be more obvious? But their problem is, that try as you might, you will never find a thought in the neural data. It is just as Leibniz said - blow up a brain to the size of a mill and stroll through it. You will never find a thought inside it. — Wayfarer
Hang on, you will say. What about those amazing devices which allow science to reconstruct images from neural data? Subject thinks 'yacht', and lo, a yacht appears on the monitor. — Wayfarer
What has actually happened is the cognitive science, not neuroscience as such, — Wayfarer
. Of course, one of Bunge's nemeses, Arthur Schopenhauer — Wayfarer
We pretend that there are infinitely many integers even though we can think of only finitely many of them - and this because we assign the set of all integers definite properties, such as that of being included in the set of rational numbers. — Bunge, Ontology II: A World Of Systems, page 169)
We don't pretend that there are infinitely many integers, because there are infinitely many integers. That's how integers work. And they work that way not just in this or that mind, but as an activity performed by our community. — Banno
The 'solution' on offer not only agrees with this but explains how it comes about. "Counts as..." illocutions set up new games to play. If you decide to move your Bishop along a row, you have ceased to play Chess, and your piece no longer "counts as ..." a Bishop. If you decide that 3+4=8, then you have ceased to do maths, and your "3" and "4" no longer count as 3's or 4's. — Banno
2/4 = 1/2 — Arcane Sandwich
That's an equivalence, not a reduction. — Banno
The sort of reduction in question occurs when one language game is thought of as a part of anther. In this case you are in effect claiming that mathematics is a game within biology, and not a distinct, seperate activity. — Banno
Seems pretty plain to me that this is a mistake. Maths is no a variation of biology any more than Chess is a variation of Poker. They are very different activities. — Banno
The solution to this is to say that there are potentially infinitely many integers. Once the logic of iteration is in place, there are potentially infinitely many integers just because there is no inherent logical limit to iteration. — Janus
↪Janus
Yep. The way we do integers is such that there is no largest integer. — Banno
you won't find the feeling of "I'm hungry" anywhere, on your anatomy table. — Arcane Sandwich
Why are you against the very concept ofcognitive neuroscience to begin with? That's the part that I can't seem to wrap my head around. Like, it's not that crazy as you make it sound, man. Bunge himself said that one of the cutting edge sciences of today is cognitive neuroscience. — Arcane Sandwich
I'm not Bunge. — Arcane Sandwich
my solution is better than yours, because my solution is technically Bunge's solution to the problem. If this is reduced to community terms, I prefer to agree with Bunge than with you on that point. — Arcane Sandwich
Hang on, you will say. What about those amazing devices which allow science to reconstruct images from neural data? Subject thinks 'yacht', and lo, a yacht appears on the monitor.
— Wayfarer
I've never heard of such a thing. I don't think that's possible, — Arcane Sandwich
The point I've made, which indeed you haven't wrapped your head around, is that the world within which materialism is true, is one created by the brain/mind — Wayfarer
I'm saying materialism gets it backwards or upside down, in pursuit of so-called scientific certainty. — Wayfarer
Philosophy in Australia is not that simple.So are you an Australian Realist, yes or no? — Arcane Sandwich
And I'm saying that you get it backwards or upside down, in pursuit of so-called anti-scientific certainty. — Arcane Sandwich
↪Arcane Sandwich
I'm beginning to form the view that you're too confused to debate with. — Wayfarer
You will jump in with an appeal to Mario Bunge, who you mention frequently, who is a textbook scientific materialism and professor of scientism, yet when those ideas are criticized, you will say, 'hey that's not me, that's him!' - even though you're the one who introduced him and appeared to argue for his position. What gives? — Wayfarer
You will say things that I find quite agreeable with, and then a couple of sentences later, say the opposite. Maybe your screen name is well-chosen. :chin: — Wayfarer
So are you an Australian Realist, yes or no? — Arcane Sandwich
Philosophy in Australia is not that simple. — Banno
Give me a specific example of such behavior on my part. With quotes. — Arcane Sandwich
Then don't debate with me. No one's forcing you. — Arcane Sandwich
I did just that, but you're in such a hurry to reply that you didn't notice. — Wayfarer
Sure thing. Hope you enjoy your time here, but might serve not to spread yourself too thin. — Wayfarer
Fifty posts a day is a lot. Make sure you take time to step away from the screen.I'm having a great time here, it's the best Forum I've ever seen. A bit "rambly" at times, but it's a nice atmosphere. I like the colors, green is actually my favorite color. — Arcane Sandwich
I agree it's not a pretence, it's a logical entailment.Salient bit is that it's not a pretence that there is no largest integer, it's just what we do with integers. — Banno
I don't know, maybe. But if so, then you're no longer doing mathematics, you're doing something else. — Arcane Sandwich
So, all I'm saying is that I think what I outlined is the best way to understand the situation regarding what is a given in mathematics—that there are infinitely many integers. — Janus
But the question of the OP literally asks if they exist in a "Platonistic" (sic) Platonic way. — Arcane Sandwich
Philosophy in Australia is not that simple. — Banno
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